Hockaday v. Schloer

94 A. 526, 125 Md. 677, 1915 Md. LEXIS 248
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 21, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 94 A. 526 (Hockaday v. Schloer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hockaday v. Schloer, 94 A. 526, 125 Md. 677, 1915 Md. LEXIS 248 (Md. 1915).

Opinion

*679 Constable, J.,

delivered the opinion, of the Court.

This appeal involves the right of action by an employee against her employer for personal injuries sustained while in the employer’s service. So numerous have been the decisions of this Court in actions of this character that the principles governing them can be considered thoroughly established and render it entirely unnecessary to look for adjudicated cases in other jurisdictions.

At the close of the case the appellants offered two prayers, among others, asking the Court, in the first, to instruct the jury to find a verdict for them upon the ground that there was no legally sufficient evidence to show that they had failed in the performance of any of the duties which they may have owed the plaintiff, as alleged in the declaration; and in the second, to rule as a matter of law that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence.. The Court refused both of these prayers and submitted the issues for the determination of the jury. In considering the first of these prayers, which constitutes a demurrer to the evidence, it is hardly necessary to say that the Court is to assume the truth of the plaintiff’s testimony, regardless of any contradiction in the evidence offered by the defendant, however strong and convincing that may be; for the weight of the evidence is solely to be judged by the jury. Since this prayer raises the right of the plaintiff to recover under the allegations of the declaration, it will be necessary to examine the declaration, for it is the settled law that the defendant has the right to have the jury confined to the issues made by the pleadings. City Pass. Ry. Co. v. Nugent, 86 Md. 360; Fletcher v. Dixon, 107 Md. 420.

By the declaration, it is alleged that the plaintiff, a girl under fourteen years of age, was employed by the defendants, a co-partnership, and put to work on and around certain sewing machines and a certain bobbin winding machine, without being properly cautioned as to the dangers attending the working in and around said machines, and having been given no instruction, caution nor warning, which an inexperienced *680 employee of her age was entitled to receive. That on a certain day, while so employed, the plaintiff dropped a bobbin which fell beyond a set of rollers, with which one of the sewing machines was equipped, and that in reaching over the • rollers to recover the bobbin, the fingers of the plaintiff’s right hand were caught and drawn between the rollers and crushed; that as her fingers were being drawn between the rollers, the machine was stopped, but before she could extricate her fingers, the rollers, because of the defective and unsafe condition of the machinery, were again set in motion, and the hand drawn through the rollers to the wrist. The negligence of the defendants is again specifically charged in that, (1) the plaintiff was not instructed, cautioned and warned as to the dangers attendant upon the operation of the machinery; (2) in not providing safe and suitable machinery, and (3) in starting the machinery again after the plaintiff’s fingers were caught and before they could be extricated.

The proof offered by the plaintiff showed that the appellants owned and operated a factory where belting for the running of machinery was manufactured from canvas. The plaintiff, under fourteen years of age and with the certificate of the Bureau of Statistics, entered the employment of the appellant about three months before the day of the accident. She worked during the first month as a sweeper*, and then was assigned to the sewing room as a bobbin winder. Bobbins are small steel spools about an inch and a half in length upon which the cotton used in sewing was wound. In the sewing room were five large sewing machines and a bobbin winding machine. The duty of the plaintiff consisted in getting the empty bobbins from the sewing machines, taking them to the winder and returning them, when filled, to the sewing machines. All of the machinery in this room was run by steam power by means of shafting along the ceiling and conveyed by belting to pulleys on the machines. The sewing machines were equipped with two needles so as to sew a double row in the belting. The belting after running *681 under the needles, was carried away by means of two rollers of six inches in diameter, placed one above the other at the back of the machine and about eight inches from the needles. When in operation, these rollers revolved slowly—about six revolutions to the minute. The whole machine, including the rollers was controlled by means of a lever at the side of the operator. In starting the machine, the belting running from the shafting to the pulleys at the side of the machine was pushed by means of the lever from the loose pulley to the fixed pulley, and thus, the power conveyed to the machinery. To stop, the lever was pushed in the opposite direction, thus throwing the belting back to the loose pulley. There was no receptacle to hold the surplus bobbins on the machine on which the accident occurred. After working for a month as a sweeper, the plaintiff was sent to the bobbin winder tó be taught how to wind bobbins. Eor two or three days she worked with her, learning how to wind bobbins, and during that time carried the bobbins back and forth.' Ho caution or warning of any kind was given to her as to any danger that might be encountered in the act of delivering the bobbins; and, that, although the aisles on each side of the machine were open, and the bobbins could have been delivered at the side of the machine, the plaintiff testified she had been instructed to deliver them at the back, reaching over the rollers to do so. And the girl who instructed her testified that, although she had on several times seen the appellee placing the bobbins over the rollers, she had never cautioned her against doing it, for she, herself, did not appreciate that there was any danger.

The plaintiff described the circumstances of the accident as follows: “I took the bobbins from her machine and took them to my bobbin table and wound them, and then, when they were finished, I took them over to her machine, and then I put them down on the machine, and the machine shook, and shook the bobbins over to the roller, and then I went over to reach for them and my fingers went through the machine. *682 through the roller. After-my fingers were caught in the roller, they were only in there really a little bit, and I hollered, and she stopped the machine, and the machine started off again and then it went all the way up to there (indicating the wrist), and then I hollered again and she stopped the machine and Mr. Arthur came and got my hand out with a crowbar.” There was testimony to the effect that after the' accident, the machine was operated, and several times the lever, used to shift the belting on the pulleys, moved and at different times both started and stopped the machinery, and that this was caused by reason of the fact that the lever was loose and thus defective. The only other testimony as to the machine being in a defective condition was testimony that one or two weeks before the accident, one of the partners and the machinist were fixing it; but the witnesses did not attempt to say what repairing they were doing to it or what if any part was out of condition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 A. 526, 125 Md. 677, 1915 Md. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hockaday-v-schloer-md-1915.